"AGE M'% THE MICHIGAN DAILY fiHMSDAY, MAY 16,.195' PAflI~ ~ix TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 16,1957 CAROL BRUCE: Blonde Star Finds Audiences Receptive By DIANE FRASER} "You must pardon my dress, but I just got back from a long walk around campus," Carol Bruce, star of the drama season production, "Lady in the Dark,"' said as she relaxed in her room at the League. Informally. clad in toreadors, the blonde actress leaned back and casually reached for a cigar- ette. Looking every bit a star, even in casual dress, Miss Bruce's en- ergy seemed to radiate across the room. "It's hard to compare Ann Ar- bor audiences° with other cities," Miss Bruce began after opening Monday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. "It is in a class by itself -I think of Ann Arbor specifical- ly as a university town." Wonderful Audience She finds that the Ann Arbor audience is constantly in touch with the play and is, overall, a wonderful audience. The attractive star found her opening here similar to her open- ing of "Pal Joey" at Oxford, in England. "The hypercritical audi- ence in a university atmosphere is in the process of learning and broadening its knowledge and thus presents quite a challenge," she remarked. Lady in the Dark' is an odd show in that it doesn't get off to a flying start - the start is like a straight play and you won- der when the musical will begin," Miss Bruce commented. Special Musical This production is a special type of musilcal comedy because of its transition,, for example,' from a scene in the office of the psycho- analyst to a' wild musical num- ber. This transition is difficult for the audience and is indeed a chal- lenge for an actress, she said. Miss Bruce finds great differ- ences in audiences between cities. The difference isn't that' New York audiences appreciate the. theatre more, but it is a question of, sophistication and fine criti- cism, she remarked. "There are definitely some cities in .the United States 'that under- stand plays and are more sophis- ticated than others,", she, said. "Washington, for example, is a very sophisticated and tough audi- ence and the critics review intelli- gently although they may be harsh." In contrast, Miss Bruce finds that Chicago is not theatre-wise although the people there love and, patronize the theatre. She makes Organization Notices League International Committee, pe- titioning for the American Sisters of the International Friendship Program has been extended through Sat., May 18. Petitions are available in the Under- graduate Office of the League. . * * Christian Science Organization, regu- lar testimony meeting, May 16, 7:30, Upper Room, Lane Hall. . . . The Episcopal Student Foundation, luncheon at Canterbury House follow- ing the 12:10 celebration of Holy Com- munion, May 17. * * * The Episcopal Student Foundation, Canterbury Picnic, May 16, weather permitting. Cars will leave at 4:30 and 5:30. In case of rain, picnic will be held in Canterbury House. * * x Kappa Phi, picnic, May 16, 5:15, First Methodist Church. *.# s Michigan Crib Pre-Law Society, May 16, 3003 Student Activities Building. Speaker: F. Devine, District Attorney of Washtenaw County. "Criminal Law." * * * Student Government Council, peti- tioning is now open for three vacancies on the Student Activities Building Ad- ministrative Board. Petitions are avail- able in Mrs. Callahan's office, 2011 Stu- dent Activtities Building, and are due May 22. Petitioning is restricted to students working in an organization on the 2nd floor of the S.A.B. * " s Education School Council, tea, May 16, 3-5, Education School Lounge. All invited who are interested in the School of Education or in being certified to teach. S* * Roger Williams Fellowship, installa- tion banquet, May 17, 6:30, Fellowship Hall. Deutscher Verein, annual picnic, May 18, 2:00, meet at Tappan Hall for a ride to the Arboretum. .positions Open In Block 'M' Petitioning for Block 'M' sub- committee chairmanships will be open until 5 p.m. Monday, accord- ingeto Michael Rolfe, '59, co-chair- man of Block''M. Petitions for design, facilities, posters, productions, photography and observation are available in Rm. 2522 Student Activities Bldg. Sign-ups for 1957 Block 'M' will remain open from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. today only on the diag. Anyone interested in working. on other Wolverine Club commit- tees can pick up-information at the SAB, Rolfe added. Hectorians Tap Eleven Members When Zeus climbed high on gold- en dawn And smiled on fates of Priams' land. He blessed pursuit . At noble Hector's hand. The call went forth For each to take his stand. Then all the best of Troy were brought By honor to this noble band. John Burt, James Cripe, Mal- cohn Cumming, James Glaspie, James Isbister, Thomas Raisor, Richard Spindle, Robert Talley,' Robert Trost, Richard Van Gem- ert, and Harvey Weiss, Quadrants Tap. At South Quad Quadrants; South Quad honor- ary, last night tapped the follow- ing Thomas Blues, '58; Fred Chan- non, '59E; Thomas Cook, '59; Richard Gerber, '58; Willard Har- rison, '59Ph.; Robert Hughes, '58; Thomas Jolls, '58; Don Iimpel, '59; Jerry Meier, '59; Jack Piper, '58; David Tarr, '59; and Richard Zern, '57. Public Speaker and of his Speaking on Room, Rackham Building, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. M. Sattler. Doctoral Examination for Leslie Rob- ert Beach, Education; thesis: "The Re- lationship Between Sociability, Satis- faction, and Academic Achievement in Various Types of Learning Situations", Thursday, May 16, 1600 University Ele- mentary School, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, W. A. Ketcham. Doctoral Examination for Henry Pe- ter Ippel, History; thesis: "Jeffery, Lord Amherst, British Commander-in- Chief, 1778 to 1782", Thurs., May 16, 3609 Haven Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chair- man, W. B. Willcox. Doctoral Examination for Allan Rus- sell Emery, Chemistry; thesis: "A Ra- man Spectroscopic Investigation of the Structure of the Borohydride Ion and Aluminum Borohydride," Fr., May 17, 3003 Chemistry Building, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, R. C. Taylor. Doctoral Examination ,.for William. Riley VanBuskirk, Jr., Germanic Lan- guages and Literatures; thesis: "The Bases of Satire in Gustav Meyrink's Work," Friday, May 17, 102D Tappan Hall, at 3:00 p.m. Chairman, F. B., Wahr.- Doctoral Examination, for Donald Fred Huelke, Anatomy; thesis: "A study of the Branches of the, Subclavian and Axilary Arteries and of the Scapu- lar Anastomoses" Fri., May 17, 3502 East Medical Bldg., at 1:30 p.m., Chair- man, R. T. Wood*ur**. Doctoral Examination for Vladimir Honsa, Romance Languages and Liter- atures; thesis: "La Gran Conquista de Ultramar, Book IV,' Chapters 126-193, Critical Edition, Grammatical Analy- sis and Glossary," Friday, May 17, East Council Room, Rackham Build- ing, at 4:00 p.m. Chairman, L: B. Kid- dle. Doctoral Examination for Rajendra Prasad, Philosophy; thesis: "A Non- Cognitivist 'Analysis of Moral Lan- guage: A Study of Meaning and Justi- fication," Fri., May 17, 2214 Angell Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chairmoan, C. L. Stevenson, Organic Chemistry. Seminar Thurs., May 16, 7:30 p.m.; Room 1300 Chemistry Building. Mr. D. H. Kenny will speak on "The Rearrangement of a, b-Epoxy Ketones" Mr. It. E. Gilman will speak on "The Chemistry of Trimethylene Oxides." Physical-Analytical-Inorganic Semi- nar: Thurs., May 16, 7:30 p.m., Room 3005 ,Chemistry Building. Mr. C. Heitsch will speak on "Transition. Metal Car- bonyls." Mr. A. Slotter will speak on "Lability of Metal Complexes in So- lution." Lectures Can A Lawyer Be Moral? Prof. John Reed of the Law School will speak in- formally on this topic at the weekly coffee hour of the Office of Religious Affairs, Friday, May 17, 4:30 p.m., Lane Hall library. Placement Notices Beginning with Wednesday, May 22, the following schools will be at the Bureau of Appointments to interview for teachers for the 1957-58 school year. Wednesday, May 22 Monroe, Michigan -- Journalism, En- glish; English; Math; Spanish/ French. River Rouge, Michigan - Elemen- tary; Elementary Art; High School Girls Physical Education. Thursday, May 23 Northville, Michigan -- Elementary (1-3-6). For additional information and ap- pointments contact the Bureau of Ap- pointments, 3528 Administration Build- ing, NO 3-1511, Ext. 489. PERSONNEL REQUESTS: Studebaker-Packard Corp., South Bend, Ind., needs men for Acctg., Time Study Engrg., Sales Management, Man- ufacturing Analysis, Mech. E., Process B, and Law. St. Louis, Mich., is looking for a man with experience in diesel generation and electrical distribution for the post- tion of Superintendent-Municipal Elec- tric Utility. Swift & Co., Chicago, Ill., has an . opening in the Soap Dept. for Sales- men. Montgomery Ward Co., Detroit, Mich., has two openings for Accountants. Goldman, Sachs & Co., New York, N. Y., is looking for a Junior Sales Ex- ecutive for the Commercial Paper Dept. Pension Trust Advisory Service, Har- risburg, Pa., needs a man with a degree in the Actuarial Field. Catholic Youth Organization, Sacra- mento, Calif., has an opening for a man to work as supervisor of activities, Surface Combustion Corp., Toledo, Ohio, needs a man with. a major in Advertising or Journalism for the In- dustrial Advertising Dept. to assist the Advertising and Publicity Managers in creative assignments. A representative will be on campus to talk with candi- dates today, Thurs., May 16. X For further information contact the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Admit. Bldg., ext. 3371. , I * Expert Tailoring and Repair * Shirt Collars Turned * Individual Attention Given to Dry Cleaning and Shirts in our Plant. 629 East University (near South University and East Quad I DRAMA SEASON STAR-Carol Bruce, currently appearing in the drama season production "Lady in the Dark," finds the Ann Arbor audience a challenge because of the hypercritical nature of a university atmosphere. L a line of distinction between audi- ences that appreciate and under- stand the theatre and those that just patronize and enjoy it. TV Helps Theater "T h e a t r e appreciation and awareness has been helped by television, certainly not hurt by it," Miss Bruce commented. She believes that TV has become a training ground for actors and a medium for communicating dra- ma to the public. Reaching for a cup of coffee, the attractive actress thought of her start in show business, A series of gradual steps led Miss Bruce from a band vocalist to solo entertainer. "My first attempt at a musical opened and immediately closed in Boston," she laughed. "Strangely enough, it was titled "Nice Go- ing!" From there, Miss Bruce per- formed in vaudeville. "Only it wasn't called vaudeville by that time - it was personal appear- ances," she added. Star of Showboat The revival of "Showboat" on Broadway was Miss Bruce's real beginning in musical comedy when Rodgers and Hammerstein selected her for the role of Julie. "Actually I have had no official training in acting or singing; I never had time," the drama sea- son star related as she thought of her rise to stardom. "Many of us had our training while we" worked." "The emphasis now is on form- alized training," Miss Bruce re- marked. "Through this, actors get something that we didn't get, but then they will never get the ex- perience we did from audiences in a variety of media." "Security gained from perform- ing in night clubs where people are eating, or from singing with a band while they dance enables a performer to cope with- any type of audience," the actress stressed. Miss Bruce believes that poise from this security is invaluable in any type of theatre. "It is the old cliche 'experience is the best teacher.' There is no substitute for experience," she added. if Herman Besselink tapped as an honorary '59, was member. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN__ (Continued from Page 4) Acarina of a Hemlock-Yellow Birch Forest Floor", Thurs., May 16, 4048 Nat- ural Science Building, at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, S. A. Grahamx. Doctoral Examination for E. Orville Johnson, Speech; thesis: "Oliver P. Slavery, Civil War, and Reconstruction issues", Thurs., May 16, East Eouncil Morton:A. Study of his Care, as: a HI FT STUDIO Your Headquarters for., " I I TCOMPONENTS * HI FI KITS " HI FI PHONOGRAPHS " AM FM RADIOS * NEW AND USED TV SETS 1317 South University NO 8-7942 11 I I DON'T MISS LIVE DANGEROUSLY ? LIVE INTERNATIONALLY!- Ann Arbor's Annual J.C.C. BUILDERS f Wanted: SHOW Isolationists & nationalists & those who DON'T believe in peace, brotherhood & justice. (International living open to all males, grad or no grad, for summer and/or fall. Mod- erote room & board or. board expense.) Attent*on Featuring - The Wade Shows With Disney Designed AMUSEMENT RIDES Call: Personnel Chairman International House 915 Oakland Ave., NO 3-8506 " BUILDERS & MERCHANTS EXHIBITS * AUTOMOTIVE SHOW SENIORS HOURS: Thurs. and Fri. from 2 P.M. to 10 P.M. Sat. from 12 noon' to 10 P.M., Sun. from 12 noon to 8 P.M. SPECIAL KIDDIES DAY PRICES ON THURS. & FRI. FROM 2 TO 6 FREE SHOW TWICE NIGHTLY TONIGHT at 6:30 and 10:00 a square dancing show will be held. Coming shows include a U. of M. trampoline exhibition, The Washtenaw Indians and The Dan Forth Combo. AT 4 *.4 order your YOST FIELDHOUSE III CAP and GOWN for ROTC units y , U n O S O O of Limited Number Only M ENSIANS 0.. ARMY-AIR FORCE -NAVY and I OFFICER'S OXFORDS 0 I 30 h) LEATHER SOLES CALFSKIN UPPERS $ 725 'I RECORDS Left! . . $7.95 I DISTRIBUTION I -qw : fl